WASHINGTON — Donald Trump took the oath of office on Monday inside a tightly packed Capitol Rotunda, where he was surrounded by a very different Washington than he was eight years ago.
Back then, when Trump gave a speech about ''American carnage'' on the inaugural stage in the rain, many congressional Republicans were silently prepared to push back on the most radical elements of his agenda and investigate his background.
Today, they are almost unanimously backing the president. World leaders and corporate CEOs who once balked at Trump attended the ceremony, prepared to brave the bitter cold to publicly show their support before events were moved inside.
It is also a far different Washington from four years ago, when the stage built for Democrat Joe Biden's inauguration had to be hastily repaired after an insurrection of Trump's supporters two weeks before. The rioters tore pieces off the scaffolding to use as weapons against police who tried to stop them from breaking into the Capitol and halting the certification of Biden's victory.
The Rotunda was packed then, too, as rioters violently rushed in after breaking through the main doors. They hung off statues, called out for lawmakers and battled police who were trying to push them out of the building. They walked through Statuary Hall — where Trump was celebrated in a post-ceremony luncheon on Monday — before trying to break down the doors of the House chamber with lawmakers still inside.
Trump refused to attend Biden's inauguration, and many Republicans thought Trump's political career was over in 2021. But he came back stronger than ever — and brought Washington with him.
''It's a party victory in the sense that there's this new populist Republican Party,'' said Sen. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D. ''There's no question that the enthusiasm level is much higher than it was eight years ago.''
Amid the positive energy for Trump, even some Democrats appeared to be open to working with him.